I have emailed Wenzel about pricing and whether or not they will sell small quantities. Will advise.

Jim
[email protected]

On 10/17/2014 2:32 PM, S. Jackson via time-nuts wrote:
Hello Jim,
let me answer through Time Nuts as this may interest  other parties as
well.
Yes, using a fast flip flop to generate 10MHz out of  the 20MHz TCXO 3.0V
CMOS output from the LTE-Lite module will preserve the phase  noise (actually
improve it by up to 6dB due to the 20log(n/m) noise improvement)  and will
not add any spurs if you use the clean 3.0V output from the LTE-Lite  module
or an external clean power supply (please note the LTE-Lite TCXO RF  output
is 3.0V due to the internal 3.3V to 3.0V Low Noise regulator feeding the
TCXO and buffer).
Use fast logic such as 74AC74, 74FCT74, or the like.  We do exactly that on
our ULN-2550 boards to generate 50MHz and 25MHz out of the  100MHz, and
using a fast CMOS divider will result in additive phase noise  that will be
below the crystal oscillator phase noise floor.
That will result in significantly better phase noise and  much lower spurs
than using the synthesized 10MHz output from the board, and one  74' chip
can generate both 10MHz and 5MHz out of the 20MHz LTE-Lite output. This  is
exactly what we would do here if we needed a clean 10MHz from the 20MHz
LTE-Lite board.
I believe you can order low-noise divide-by-2  blue-top boxes from Wenzel
already packaged-up and connectorized as  well.
Hope that helps,
Said
Hi Said
I was one of those looking for 10Mhz but I just thought  again now that it
might be just as well to divide the standard 20Mhz output by 2  using a FF.
I think that would preserve all the desirable characteristics of the  20Mhz
signal which I understand to just be square wave at CMOS 3.3v levels
anyway. Is that correct?
Thanks
Jim
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